What investors at this stage are likely to like about your business:

Your business model.

You’re making money and beginning to grow your customer base. You’re building increasing evidence through sales that you’re solving a significant problem in the market and that you’re differentiated enough that people are paying you for your solution.

Your product.

You’ve nailed user experience in your product – it’s easy to use and your customers are continuing to use it. Your team has a deep understanding of the customer’s pain points, what features need to be improved, and have a product roadmap to address those concerns.

Your sales/distribution strategy.

You’re in promising conversations with potential partners for sales and distribution to take your product to market at scale. You might even have such partnership in place already, and it’s important to emphasize this to investors as it’s what enables you to beat your competition in gaining market share.

What investors at this stage are likely to ask questions about:

Customer base:

Investors will want to see that you can move beyond early adopters to a larger customer base. When do you think your sales will start mapping to projections and what’s your strategy to get there?